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Commodity prices, the exchange rate and manufacturing in South Africa: what do the data say?

Duncan Hodge (Department of Economics, University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa)

African Journal of Economic and Management Studies

ISSN: 2040-0705

Article publication date: 7 December 2015

836

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to investigate the empirical relationships between changes in OECD output, commodity prices, the real exchange rate, real money supply, unit labour costs and manufacturing in South Africa. In particular, to test a version of the Dutch disease argument that increases in the prices of South Africa’s main commodity exports have had a negative effect on domestic manufacturing against the alternative hypothesis that there is a positive relationship between such changes in commodity prices and domestic manufacturing output.

Design/methodology/approach

Construction of a model including real manufacturing output in South Africa as the dependent variable and the following independent variables: OECD output, an international real metals price index, a real effective exchange rate index, real M3 money supply and manufacturing unit labour costs. The time series sample data comprise 124 quarterly observations for the period 1980-2010. The model equation was tested and estimated using a Johansen cointegration approach.

Findings

The main findings are: OECD output is the single most important determinant of domestic manufacturing output; while the real exchange rate has the predicted negative sign, rising commodity prices are associated with increases rather than decreases in domestic manufacturing and; large increases in unit labour costs since the early 1980s have dragged down manufacturing over the sample period.

Originality/value

The finding of a positive relationship between commodity prices and domestic manufacturing means that the Dutch disease argument must be revised when applied to South Africa. While rising commodity prices may lead to a negative exchange rate effect on manufacturing competitiveness, this is more than offset by the positive growth effects associated with upswings in the commodity price cycle.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

JEL Classification — F49, O19, O14, O55

The author thanks Economic Research Southern Africa (ERSA) for financial assistance towards this project.

Citation

Hodge, D. (2015), "Commodity prices, the exchange rate and manufacturing in South Africa: what do the data say?", African Journal of Economic and Management Studies, Vol. 6 No. 4, pp. 356-379. https://doi.org/10.1108/AJEMS-09-2013-0085

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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